There
have been many years in which I’ve been personally disappointed in the voting selection
produced by the Baseball Writers’ Association of America (BBWAA); but, this
year’s choices were perfect in my opinion.
My congratulations go to all 4 of them:
Randy Johnson, John Smoltz, Craig Biggio, and even Pedro Martinez.
Randy
Johnson
– Was there ever a more intimidating starting pitcher in baseball? Some would say Nolan Ryan, but even Nolan
didn’t have a 6’10” presence on the mound!
Additionally, Randy had more control issues than Nolan – which often
added to his intimidation to the hitters as they tiptoed into the batter’s
box. While Randy contributed enormously
towards preventing the Yankees from winning a championship in 2001 when he
jointly won the World Series MVP with Curt Schilling, I still appreciated his exceptional
ability to strikeout any hitter - 2nd most in baseball history
(4,875) behind the abovementioned Nolan Ryan (5,714). Randy was hurt during his two years as a
Yankee, so we didn’t gain too much from him, nor did those stats add substantially
towards his personal Hall of Fame career, including his collection of 5 Cy
Young Awards.
John
Smoltz
– No one in the history of the Major Leagues has ever accomplished a feat that
John Smoltz did. First, he was an
awesome starter; then he became one of the league’s best closers, and then,
once again, performed as a great starter.
In between all of that, he had the infamous Tommy John Surgery. Collectively, as a starter he won over 200
games (including a Cy Young Award in 1996).
During his years as a closer, he saved over 150 games while winning a
reliever’s top prize (the Rolaids Relief Man of the Year Award) in 2002! His seamless and unprecedented transitional success
clearly and solely qualifies Smoltz as a deserving Hall of Famer. We may never see that type of achievement
again!
Craig
Biggio
– There are very few players that I’ve ever seen during personal years of
watching the game who clearly epitomize themselves as one of the purest hitters
and classiest characters. Without question, Biggio exhibited that to me
during each of the 20 years he played - all for the Astros. Biggio demonstrated efficient versatility as
he began his MLB years as a very good catcher and then (per Yogi Berra’s
suggestion), in order to help his team, he learned to play 2nd base
exceptionally enough to have won 4 Gold Gloves there. During his late years, he even proved to be a
decent outfielder. Biggio, like me,
idolized the Yankees’ Thurman Munson – also, one of the “purest hitters and classiest
characters” in the history of the game.
That, along with his proven diverse skills, durability (even after being
hit by a pitch 285 times), and persistent offensive numbers (5th in
all-time doubles) would have certainly earned him my vote (if I was ever lucky
enough to matter for such great things) during his very first year of
eligibility in 2013.
Pedro
Martinez
– As a Yankees’ fan, what could I possibly state about Pedro without using many
profane adjectives? Not much, except
when I focus on his pure baseball skills as Pedro won 119 more games than he
lost, led the American League in Earned Run Average 5 times (not easy when the
league’s offense included “my” championship Yankees of the 90s), and won the Cy
Young Award 3 times. Any objective
Yankees’ fan would tell you that Pedro was one of the best pitchers from
1990-2004. As one of the shortest
starting pitchers (5’11”) to ever get voted into the Hall of Fame, Pedro’s achievements
are more impressive than much taller pitchers with more advantageous pitching
slopes. Yes, he had a great fastball, but most of his dominance came from his demonstrated
sophistication of the art of pitching. It’s
a good thing that the neither the late Don Zimmer nor Jorge Posada were involved
in Pedro’s Hall of Fame selection!
Of the
remaining candidates that did not get enough votes, here are the ones that had
decent vote results and have potential for being voted into the Hall of Fame in
the future:
Tim
Raines
– Tim was one of baseball’s best leadoff hitters with the 4th most
stolen bases (808), a .294 career batting average, and a whopping 1,571 runs
scored. Many of his statistics are
somewhat similar to the immortal Ricky Henderson and any player that can be
compared to Ricky Henderson certainly qualifies as a Hall of Famer. One key thing that Raines achieved, beyond
Ricky or anyone in baseball, was accomplishing the highest successful stolen
base percentage (84.7%)! Hence, he undoubtedly
deserves to be in the Hall of Fame.
Hopefully, by next year, the BBWAA will recognize that before it’s too
late.
Mike
Piazza
– Of course, as “TheNYY” writer, I have to slight the Mets whenever I get a
chance! Okay, so I don’t “have to”
slight them; but, I also don’t have to overly support them! Starting with the negative, Mike Piazza had
defensive issues (having never won a Gold Glove) with his main defensive flaw
coming from his pitiful ability to throw out runners - he only threw out 23% of
the base-stealers compared to his own peers’ success of 64.5% with the same
pitching staffs (according to billjamesonline.com). Now, back to my ability to being objective
with Piazza’s positives: There’s no
question that Piazza was a superb hitter!
Besides his power, he was not an easy out for any pitcher, as he had
many clutch hits against them. Piazza produced
some of the best offensive numbers as a catcher with an impressive .308 batting
average and owns the record of the most homers of any MLB catcher (427). That being said, his greatest achievement (offense)
is disputed; that’s because many sports analysts, fans, and, most importantly the
BBWAA feel that there’s strong enough suspicion that Piazza cheated with steroid
usage - although, there are currently no factual documentations to back up such
claims. Even without hard evidence, many
of the writers are skeptical because, if it is later found that Piazza did
indeed cheat, they don’t want their personal writing careers tarnished, especially
when their gut feeling was telling not to vote initially. Most of the BBWAA don’t want any player in
the Hall of Fame who is definitively or speculatively tied to steroid usage. I think another year of waiting to possibly
vote Piazza into the Hall of Fame gives some extra time for any potential,
further evidence to be divulged, and it gives the skeptical writers another
year to weigh their decisions. In his 3 past years of Hall of Fame eligibility,
Piazza’s votes have incremented mathematically enough to potentially achieve the
necessary 75% by next year - if no concrete evidence is found on him in the
interim.
Mike
Mussina
- Only 24.6% of the baseball writers voted for Mussina (from 20.3% the prior
year). I loved Mussina on the Yankees
and even as one of Baltimore’s pitchers.
He, like Pedro, had a decent pitching repertoire, but used a lot of ingenuity
with it. I feel that he is better than a
lot of pitchers already in the Hall of Fame, so I lean towards his eventual election. Some feel that Mussina has a chance in the
future mainly because there aren’t many comparable starting pitchers to compete
against him, at least over the next few years.
He has collectively won 220 games, won 7 Gold Glove Awards, and earned
many Cy Young votes for 6 different seasons (even though he had never won any).
Nowadays, winning 220 games is
impressive enough because pitchers don’t get the chance to attain wins in the
later innings anymore, due to pitch counts.
In the past, the BBWAA would automatically qualify starters who achieved
300 wins to qualify for the Hall of Fame.
Hopefully, they’ll factor in such key changes to today’s games.
As "TheNYY Writer", how can I not mention Don Mattingly when it comes to the
Hall of Fame voting during his (now) last year of eligibility? Yes, it’s true that Donnie Baseball will now
not officially make it into the Hall of Fame by the standard procedure of being
voted by the BBWAA; but, there’s still hope because he can achieve votes in the
next process which goes to MLB’s Veteran’s Committee (the Expansion Era
Committee division) from their 2017 voting process (they only vote every 3
years). Additionally, if Mattingly
continues to manage successfully for many more years, he may also have a chance to get voted as a manager, like Joe Torre did. Only the future will tell.
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